Veritas Volume Manager 4.1 Administrator's Guide (HP-UX 11i v3, February 2007)

Administering DMP Using vxdmpadm
120 VERITAS Volume Manager Administrators Guide
nopreferred
Restores the normal priority of a path. The following example restores the default
priority to a path:
# vxdmpadm setattr path c1t20d0 pathtype=nopreferred
preferred [priority=N]
Specifies a path as preferred, and optionally assigns a priority number to it. If
specified, the priority number must be an integer that is greater than or equal to one.
Higher priority numbers indicate that a path is able to carry a greater I/O load.
Note Setting a priority for path does not change the I/O policy. The I/O policy must
be set independently as described in “Specifying the I/O Policy” on page 121.
This example first sets the I/O policy to priority for an Active/Active disk array,
and then specifies a preferred path with an assigned priority of 2:
# vxdmpadm setattr enclosure enc0 iopolicy=priority
# vxdmpadm setattr path c1t20d0 pathtype=preferred \
priority=2
primary
Defines a path as being the primary path for an Active/Passive disk array. The
following example specifies a primary path for an A/P disk array:
# vxdmpadm setattr path c3t10d0 pathtype=primary
secondary
Defines a path as being the secondary path for an Active/Passive disk array. This
example specifies a secondary path for an A/P disk array:
# vxdmpadm setattr path c4t10d0 pathtype=secondary
standby
Marks a standby (failover) path that it is not used for normal I/O scheduling. This
path is used if there are no active paths available for I/O. The next example specifies a
standby path for an A/P-C disk array:
# vxdmpadm setattr path c2t10d0 pathtype=standby